(Q28842706)

English

Bernard Houthakker

Dutch art dealer (1884-1963)

  • Houthakker

Statements

0 references
0 references
1 reference
Ackermann, Paris; O. Skaller, Berlin vor 1924; 1938 B. Houthakker, Amsterdam; W. Weinberg Amsterdam, Scarsdale; 1957 Geschenk an Museum Kröller -Müller, Otterlo (German)
1 reference
Previous;attribution;Gottfried;Schalcken;(Godfried;Schalcken);1781 Henrietta van der Schagen;(Van der Schley, Van Amstel;De Winter, Yver, Amsterdam;May 16, 1781, no.63);1804 Van Leyden (A. Paillet, H. Delaroche;Paris, Sep. 10, 1804, no. 104);1952 1955 Dealer: Bernard Houthakker;Amsterdam (bought from;London dealer);1955 Toledo Museum of Art;Toledo Museum of Art;Provenance Report, page 27 (English)
1 reference
(sale, Frankfurt, Prestel 10-16 November 1920, no. 2296 as Jeremias van Winjhe); (sale, Amsterdam, DeVries 24-25 January 1922, no. 614 as Joos van Winjhe); (sale, Amsterdam, DeVries 1929 as Joos van Winjhe); B. Houthakker, Amsterdam; (Galerie Kurt Meissner); purchased by NGA, 1984. (English)
17 April 2024
1 reference
But in many cases, following protracted, exhausting and unsuccessful bureaucratic proceedings, claimants gave up on getting their property back from Dutch authorities. A case in point is that of Bernard Houthakker, an Amsterdam antiques dealer who survived Theresienstadt. He provided information to the Netherlands government about a valuable painting that had been stolen from him and had been returned to the state, but ultimately, for unclear reasons, abandoned the quest. (English)

Identifiers

 
edit
    edit
      edit
        edit
          edit
            edit
              edit
                edit
                  edit